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21 Sentences With "be of the opinion"

How to use be of the opinion in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "be of the opinion" and check conjugation/comparative form for "be of the opinion". Mastering all the usages of "be of the opinion" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I'm getting to be of the opinion that monetary policy is not a lever for inflation.
Writer Maura Judkis seems to be of the opinion that it is a salad, just not a very good one.
Mr. McNally seemed to be of the opinion that the rest of the country, out there beyond the mountains, was losing its mind.
Speaking to MMA Fighting's Chuck Mindenhall, Hooft appears to be of the opinion that Spong won't be returning to MMA any time soon—if at all.
As a kid who watched a lot of cheesy educational videos in school growing up, I used to be of the opinion that they were just pointless.
Speaking to supporters, the idea of renewed 'identity' crops up on several occasions, and most seem to be of the opinion that the fanbase has gone back to its roots.
"The board seems to be of the opinion that Biogen has matured into a complex commercial organization, and that protecting and growing the company's $11 billion revenue base is now the most important priority," Schmidt said.
"I think anyone would be of the opinion that if we don't ever have to test another nuclear weapon that would be a good thing, not just for the United States, but for the world," he said.
But both senators appear to be of the opinion that while Trump is right to be heterodox on guns, his personal brand is so toxic that it makes more sense for them not to cite their party's most prominent champion of their position.
He may be of the opinion that — and he made this argument in a law review article that he wrote — that a sitting president should be free of the everyday legal headaches that a normal citizen might endure with respect to being subject to civil or criminal prosecution.
As these pontificating, grandstanding politicians stand in the well of the House ranting and raving impeachment of the president, or cable network talking heads spewing forth the same diatribe, these people seem to be of the opinion impeachment is the first and final stage of removing a president from office.
III, 1976, p. 948. seems to be of the opinion that justice “has a power of omniscience, a collective memory and a capacity for eventual action which far transcend the law’s imperfect machinery”Donald Adamson, Ursule Mirouët, Penguin Classics (Harmondsworth: 1976), p. 10. – though allowance should be made for free indirect discourse. Nowhere else in La Comédie humaine is this opinion so categorically stated.
In her history of the Gregynog Press, Dorothy A. Harrop reports that Robert Maynard (the Controller of the Press) "came to be of the opinion that Hodgson was probably the best pressman in the country at that time. … Hodgson’s name appears for the first time in the Colophon and his masterly touch is already apparent. … The printing of these…… represents a triumph for Hodgson."A History of the Gregynog Press, by Dorothy A. Harrop, 1980.
The Packers and Stockyards Act provides the Secretary of Agriculture the authority to set rates to be paid by agencies for services rendered. Under the Act, however, two conditions are put upon the exercise of this power: (1) The Secretary must be of the opinion that the existing rate is unjust, and (2) this opinion must be the result of a full hearing. In the early 1930s the Secretary of Agriculture became concerned that the Fred O. Morgan Sheep Commission CompanyUnited States v. Morgan, .
The Governor-General wrote in his despatches to the British East India Company's directors "I am confident that your most honourable Court will be of the opinion that the conduct and success of the Army of Bombay on that day [at Seedaseer] has seldom been equalled and never surpassed.", and the battle's anniversary has been celebrated annually ever since as "Seedaseer Day" with regimental sports and, in the case of the 2nd Battalion, with a pageant of episodes during the battle in replicas of the 1799 uniforms.
Eventually after confessing he had received a £100 bribe to lose, Ward was banned from fighting in any contest governed by the Society. In this era boxing was an object of heavy betting, by members of all strata of society, including the sons of King George III. The incident has left Ward's reputation with a lasting stigma.Cyberboxing and still today causes some to be of the opinion that Ward should not have been admitted to the Boxing hall of Fame 120 years after his death Ward was the elder brother of the boxer Nick Ward, who also had a reputation for using unfair tactics.
Katagelasticism is a psychological condition in which a person excessively enjoys laughing at others (coined by Christian F. Hempelmann and Sean Harrigan from καταγελαστής (katagelastēs), Ancient Greek for "mocker"). Katagelasticists actively seek and establish situations in which they can laugh at others (at the expense of these people). There is a broad variety of things that katagelasticists would do—starting from harmless pranks or word plays to truly embarrassing and even harmful, mean-spirited jokes. They would be of the opinion that laughing at others is part of the daily life and if others do not like being laughed at, they should just fight back.
Newtown, Victoria George and Annis had no children, and following the death of George in 1927, a trust fund was set up, believed to be around £70-80,000. One of the purposes of the trust, as set out in George Bills' will, was to: :"..construct and erect and pay for horse troughs wherever they may be of the opinion that such horse troughs are desirable for the relief of horses and other dumb animals either in Australasia, in the British Islands or in any other part of the world subject to the consent of the proper authorities being obtained." Each trough cost £13 plus transport and installation . The majority of the troughs were installed in Victoria and New South Wales between 1930 and 1939.
In a 6-3 decision, the Court found that Betts did not have the right to be appointed counsel with Justice Hugo Black emphatically dissenting. In the majority opinion, Justice Owen Roberts said for the Court, In this selection from the majority opinion and throughout the rest of the opinion, Roberts continually makes the point that not all defendants in all cases will need the assistance of counsel in order to receive a fair trial with due process. Roberts appears to be of the opinion that, while counsel may be necessary to receive a fair trial in some cases, it is not in all cases. However, in his dissent, Black wrote, Black said in his dissent that the denial of counsel based on financial stability makes it so that those in poverty have an increased chance of conviction, which is not equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The first person to throw any doubt on his claim was Thomas Wright, who edited an edition of the Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles published by Jannet, Paris, 1858. He maintained, with some show of reason, that as the stories were told in Burgundy, by Burgundians, and the collected tales were "edited" by de la Salle, it was more probable that "Monseigneur" would mean the Duke than the Dauphin, and he therefore ascribed the stories to Philippe le Bel. Later French scholars, however, appear to be of the opinion that "Monseigneur" was the Comte de Charolais, who afterwards became famous as Charles le Téméraire, the last Duke of Burgundy. Some thirty-two noblemen or squires contributed the other stories, with some 14 or 15 taken from Giovanni Boccaccio, and as many more from Gian Francesco Poggio Bracciolini or other Italian writers, or French fabliaux, but about 70 of them appear to be original.
On 6 October his initial request for bail was refused by the Federal Department of Justice and Police; a spokesperson commented, "we continue to be of the opinion that there is a high risk of flight." On 2 May 2010, Polanski published an open letter entitled "I can remain silent no longer!" on Bernard-Henri Lévy's web site. In it, he stated that on 26 February 2010 Roger Gunson (the deputy district attorney in charge of the case in 1977, retired by the time of the letter) testified under oath before Judge Mary Lou Villar in the presence of David Walgren (the present deputy district attorney in charge of the case, who was at liberty to contradict and question Gunson) that on 16 September 1977 Judge Rittenband stated to all the parties concerned that Polanski's term of imprisonment in Chino constituted the totality of the sentence he would have to serve. Polanski also stated that Gunson added that it was false to claim (as the present district attorney's office does in their request for his extradition) that the time he spent in Chino was for the purpose of a diagnostic study.

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